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350 refugees drown trying to get to Australia
By Mike Head
24 October 2001
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Australias draconian new anti-refugee measures claimed
their first known victims last Friday when more than 350 asylum
seekers drowned after their over-crowded boat sank in the Indian
Ocean between Indonesia and Australias nearby Christmas
Island.
International Organisation for Migration (IOM) officials said
421 people, mainly from Iraq, but also Iran, Afghanistan, Palestine
and Algeria, had been crammed aboard the Indonesian fishing vessel
when it left the Sumatran province of Lampung on last Thursday
night. Only 44 survived, including an eight-year-old boy who lost
21 members of his family.
According to survivors accounts, the boat was so unseaworthy
that 21 people had earlier asked to be put back to shore and were
left on a small Indonesian island. On Friday afternoon, the boats
captain reported that his engines had stopped and that the vessel
was taking water. It sank within 10 minutes, survivors told IOM
staff.
No rescue operation was mounted until many hours later and
it took nearly four days for news of the drownings to appear in
the international media. The survivors were in the water for 19
hours before being plucked from the sea by Indonesian fishermen,
who came across them by chance. Eighteen were hospitalised, some
with broken bones, and all suffered cuts from clinging to driftwood
or hitting coral. Interviewed by an Australian Broadcasting Corporation
reporter, they told harrowing stories, including one father who
described how his two-year-old daughter repeatedly slipped off
his shoulders in the water.
Despite their ordeal, those interviewed were emphatic that
they would attempt the voyage again. They were determined to seek
asylum in Australia, having been stranded in Indonesia for up
to two yearsunable to find a safe country to accept them,
even though the UN had given them refugee status. The United Nations
High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) regional representative
Raymond Hall later confirmed that at least 30 of those who perished
had passed the UN refugee test.
Such desperate journeys are an inevitable result of Australian
policy. Backed by the Labor Party, the Howard government has over
the past two months mobilised naval warships to hunt and intercept
refugee boats, given the military the power to fire upon or use
other force to turn boats back to sea, and introduced unprecedented
laws quashing the legal rights of asylum seekers who land on Australias
offshore territories.
Far from preventing asylum seekers from taking to sea, these
measures ensure that the boats will take even greater risks to
avoid interception and sail direct to the Australian mainlandnow
their only hope of applying for a protection visa. The government
has admitted that its increased penalties for the crews of such
vessels were leading to bigger loads with less experienced crews,
as boat owners were having difficulty finding people to do the
job.
In a chilling comment on SBS TV News, Immigration Minister
Philip Ruddock tacitly acknowledged that the government is counting
on tragedies such as the latest drownings to discourage other
refugees from trying to reach Australia. It may have an
upside, he declared, In the sense that some people
may see the dangers inherent in it.
While church and welfare groups called on government and Labor
leaders to adopt a more humanitarian policy in the light of the
tragedy, both major parties responded by escalating the anti-refugee
demagogy that has been a central feature of the campaign for the
November 10 federal election.
Ruddocks spokesman accused the drowned people of putting
themselves at risk by bypassing the UNHCR in Indonesia. But the
government has refused to take a single one of the 5,000 Middle
Eastern asylum seekers in Indonesia, 500 of whom the UN has already
recognised as refugees. Moreover, the government accepted only
21 Afghani refugees in 2000, has no immigration officials hearing
claims in Iraq and this year halved its annual intake of refugees
applying from overseas to 4,000.
A Catholic Commission for Justice Development and peace spokesman
Marc Purcell commented: It is naïve to suggest that
millions of Afghani refugees are going to stay and rot in Pakistan
and Iran for years, or try and survive without any means of livelihood
in Indonesia or other poor countries waiting for underfunded UNHCR
offices to process their claim.
For his part, Labor leader Kim Beazley seized upon the deaths
to criticise the government for failing to obtain an agreement
from the Indonesian government to stop asylum seekers setting
sail. He declared that Labors policy of creating a coast
guard would better repel refugee boats.
Prime Minister John Howard swiftly denounced Beazley, claiming
that Beazley had blamed the government for the deaths. Howard
charged him with uttering a desperate slur and the
most despicable thing I have heard in this election campaign.
Ruddock attacked the Labor Party for not passing some of the governments
legislation earlier, claiming that as a result Australia had a
reputation as a soft touch for refugees.
Beazley quickly backed down, denying any suggestion that he
had held the government responsible for the drownings. He declared
that Labor had supported the governments measures every
step of the way but those measures had proved to be insufficient.
The bipartisan support for the present refugee policy will
ensure that further tragedies are inevitable as boats carrying
refugees are driven away from Australian waters.
Last Friday, the same day as the drownings, the navy towed
another over-crowded vessel, the Harapaninda, away from
Australias Ashmore Reef to the edge of Indonesian territorial
waters, ending a week-long standoff. Howard declared it a victory
for his governments tough stance, claiming that the 230
asylum seekers on boardwho included a new-born babyhad
returned voluntarily to Indonesia. The UNHCR said
it was deeply concerned that the government may have
breached the 1951 Refugee Convention, which prohibits the removal
of asylum seekers without a safe destination.
On Monday this week, a boat carrying about 220 refugees broke
down and began taking water just off Christmas Island, where the
navy had prevented it from landing. Without any evidence, Australian
immigration officials accused the crew of sabotaging the boat.
Military personnel were dispatched to halt a rescue bid by Christmas
Island residents and to offload the asylum seekers onto a naval
vessel. Ruddock insisted that the people would not be allowed
to land on the island and would be returned to their boat if it
could be fixed.
Government scorned UN Tampa solution
The drownings are the predictable outcome of the shift in Australian
policy since August 27 when Howard and his senior ministers made
a decision to turn away the Norwegian container ship, the Tampa,
which had rescued 433 Afghani refugees from a sinking boat in
the same sea. With Labors support, the government ordered
SAS personnel to detain the refugees on the ship just off Christmas
Island before offloading them onto a naval troopship to be shipped
to the isolated Pacific island of Nauru.
Since then, six more boats carrying nearly 1,000 people have
reached Australian waters, only to be pushed out to sea or have
their passengers removed by military personnel and transported
to camps in either Nauru or Papua New Guinea, two former Australian
colonies.
UN officials have now revealed that the Howard government rejected
a UN plan to resolve the Tampa crisis, which would have
seen several Western countries, including the United States, Sweden,
Norway and New Zealand, accepting some of the asylum seekers.
Assistant UN High Commissioner for Refugees Soren Jessen-Petersen
said the government rejected the plan, although it would have
solved the problem very quickly, because it required
the Tampas passengers to disembark at Christmas Island.
This would have undermined the governments strategy,
which was to deny the Tampa refugees their legal rights
and whip up chauvinist sentiment for electoral purposes. Howard
and Ruddock vowed repeatedly that the refugees would never be
permitted to set foot on Australian soil so as to prevent them
lodging asylum applications under Australian law or defending
their rights in court.
The government threatened the Tampas captain,
Arne Rinnan, with huge penalties under the anti-people smuggling
provisions of the Migration Act unless he headed for Indonesia.
Anyone who knowingly assists the arrival of unlawful non-citizens
can be jailed for 20 years, fined $220,000 and have their vessel
seized to pay the costs of transporting, detaining and deporting
them.
This threat was later dropped because the government realised
that it had to avoid using the Migration Act, which requires all
people arriving without a visa to be brought ashore and detained.
Ruddock has since accused the UN of offering to find places for
the Tampa refugees simply as a ruse to trap
the government into letting them land in the knowledge that
protection obligations would have been raised by law.
When the Howard government persisted in refusing to allow the
Tampa to enter Christmas Islands harbour, UN officials
warned that its actions could set an international precedent.
If other countries followed the Australian lead, it would mark
the return of the barbaric practices that prevailed following
the Vietnam War. Countries such as Thailand, Malaysia and Singapore
pushed Vietnamese refugee boats back out to sea. Thousands are
believed to have died in the South China Sea in the late 1970s
because merchant ships, unsure of being able to offload those
they rescued, sailed past boats in distress.
Last Fridays terrible tragedy confirms that warning.
See Also:
Australian navy opens fire on refugee
boat
[13 October 2001]
Australian general election: Both parties
stoke anti-immigrant prejudice
[9 October 2001]
Why the Tampa refugees
should be free to live in Australia
[31 August 2001]
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